
Please use another browser (Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge) to view. Note: Internet Explorer has problems displaying the following charts. To access the data used to build this dashboard, please visit the CBP Data Portal. Unaccompanied Children (UC) / Single Minors.Expulsions under Title 42 are not based on immigration status and are tracked separately from immigration enforcement actions, such as apprehension or inadmissibility, that are regularly reported by CBP. This order does not apply to persons who should be excepted based on considerations of law enforcement, officer and public safety, humanitarian, or public health interests. In the event a person cannot be returned to the country of last transit, CBP works with interagency partners to secure expulsion to the person’s country of origin and hold the person for the shortest time possible. To help prevent the introduction of COVID-19 into border facilities and into the United States, persons subject to the order will not be held in congregate areas for processing and instead will immediately be expelled to their country of last transit.

Under this order, CBP is prohibiting the entry of certain persons who potentially pose a health risk, either by virtue of being subject to previously announced travel restrictions or because they unlawfully entered the country to bypass health screening measures.
MAS MEANING CODE
On Mathe President, in accordance with Title 42 of the United States Code Section 265, determined that by reason of existence of COVID-19 in Mexico and Canada, there is a serious danger of the further introduction of COVID-19 into the United States that prohibition on the introduction of persons or property, in whole or in part, from Mexico and Canada is required in the interest of public health. Data is available for the Northern Land Border, Southwest Land Border, and Nationwide (i.e., air, land, and sea modes of transportation) encounters. Border Patrol (USBP) Title 8 Apprehensions, Office of Field Operations (OFO) Title 8 Inadmissibles, and Title 42 Expulsions for fiscal years (FY) 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023. Landscapes of the Soul is a passionate call to broaden our spiritual and moral horizons, to raise our eyes to the greater reality that unites us all.Encounter data includes U.S. Our emotional estrangement from God and the sacred keeps us from caring about social justice, keeps us from wanting to change the world, keeps us enclosed in our own private worlds. Only such an emotional connection, Porpora argues, can be the basis of a genuine moral vision. Yes, we are a believing people, but God is often a distant abstraction and rarely an emotional presence in our lives.

Our society is permeated with moral indifference. Many of us seem incapable of caring deeply about the suffering of others. We lack a sense of calling, of transcendent purpose in our existence. What he found was a widespread inability to articulate any grand meaning of life. He asked them about God, and about what they saw as their own place in the universe.


In his search for answers to his questions, Porpora interviewed clerks and executives, Jews, evangelical Christians, Buddhists, Taoists, and even followers of Bhagwan Sri Rajneesh. What, he asks, does religious belief actually mean in our lives? Does it shape our identities and our actions? Or, despite our professions of faith, are we morally adrift? Landscapes of the Soul paints a disturbing picture of American spiritual life. But for Douglas Porpora, the real questions begin where pollsters leave off. Do you believe in God? Nine out of ten Americans unhesitatingly answer yes.
